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Navy takes delivery of Zumwalt-class destroyer
by Richard Tomkins
Bath, Maine (UPI) May 25, 2016


New LPD for U.S. Navy christened
Pascagoula, Miss. (UPI) May 23, 2016 - A new amphibious transport dock being built for the U.S. Navy has been christened the Portland by Huntington Ingalls Shipbuilding.

The Portland (LPD 27) is the 11th San Antonio-class vessel for the Navy, which are used to embark and land U.S. Marines and their equipment and supplies.

The vessels are 684 feet long and 105 feet wide.

"Marines love these ships," said U.S. Marine Corps Maj. Gen. Christopher Owens, director of the U.S. Navy's expeditionary warfare division, at the ceremony Saturday. "They are perhaps the most versatile ships in the fleet.

"And in this current era when the United States faces a variety of threats and potential crises across the globe, LPDs uniquely enable the Navy and Marine Corps team to adapt and respond to a full range of scenarios we might face."

Ingalls delivered to the Navy the tenth LPD, John P. Murtha, on May 13 and has received more than $300 million in advance procurement funding for the 12th ship in the class, the Fort Lauderdale.

"Portland is the 11th ship in the San Antonio class, and she is the best LPD to date," Ingalls Shipbuilding President Brian Cuccias said. "Working closely with our Navy partner, we continue to improve on each ship we build."

The future USS Zumwalt, a first-of-class destroyer and lead ship of next-generation multi-mission surface combatants, has been delivered to the U.S. Navy.

Delivery from General Dynamics-Bath Iron Works took place late last week following extensive tests, trials and demonstrations.

The vessel will now remain at Bath Iron Works for a crew certification period before commissioning in mid-October.

"Today [Friday] represents a significant achievement for not only the DDG 1000 program and shipbuilding team but for the entire U.S. Navy," said Rear Adm. (select) Jim Downey, DDG 1000 program manager, Program Executive Office Ships. "This impressive ship incorporates a new design alongside the integration of sophisticated new technologies that will lead the Navy into the next generation of capabilities."

Zumwalt-class (DDG 1000) ships are tailored for sustained operations in the littorals and land attack, and will provide independent forward presence and deterrence, support special operations forces, and operate as an integral part of joint and combined expeditionary forces.

The shape of the superstructure and the arrangement antennas helps reduce detection by radar. It uses an integrated power system that distributes 1,000 volts of direct current across the vessel. The IPS' unique architectural capabilities include the ability to allocate all 78 megawatts of installed power to propulsion, ship's service, and combat system loads from the same gas turbine prime movers based on operational requirements.

Zumwalt-class ships will feature a battery of two advanced gun systems capable of firing long-range land attack projectiles, and as many as 80 Advanced Vertical Launch System cells for Tomahawk missiles, Evolved Sea Sparrow Missiles, Standard Missiles, and Vertical Launch Anti-Submarine Rockets.

The ships will use active and passive sensors and a multi-function radar system.

Bath Iron Works is under contract to build two follow-on Zumwalt-class destroyers, the future Michael Monsoor and the Lyndon B. Johnson.


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Previous Report
FLOATING STEEL
Idea That US's New Destroyer is 'Invisible' is a 'Fairy Tale for Fools'
Moscow (Sputnik) May 20, 2016
The builders of the USS Zumwalt, the US Navy's new next-generation super-destroyer, have promised that the ship would be nearly invisible to enemy radar. Military analyst Viktor Baranets told Sputnik that this simply isn't the case. The USS Zumwalt destroyer, set to be officially handed off to the US Navy on Friday at a ceremony in Bath, Maine, has already been touted as the best thing sin ... read more


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